With the U.S. midterms concluded, a new book just out, and a weekend 'Gathering' of progressive leaders and close allies in his home state of Vermont, there is plenty of fresh talk about whether Sen. Bernie Sanders will run for president again in 2020.

But while Sanders, his wife Jane O'Meara Sanders, the family, and his political team have made clear they are seriously considering it—there is no decision yet.

"We need a leader that is going to unify the world. We need someone who gives their life and heart and soul to making us secure on our planet, in our workplace, in our homes, in our lives, after we retire, when our children are born — and that's Bernie Sanders. And there is no one who comes near him on the political scene." —RoseAnn DeMoroSongwriter and music legend Bruce Springsteen may not have intended to make the case, but comments he made in an interview published on Sunday have been seized by at least a few of those clamoring for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to end the internal debate his team is having about the run and announce as the best Democratic Party candidate to challenge Donald Trump in the next election.

The longtime Democrat and legendary musician toldThe Sunday Times that Democrats in the U.S. need a candidate "who can speak some of the same language" as Trump when it comes to communicating with blue collar workers and others suffering under economic weight. "I don't see anyone out there at the moment…the man who can beat Trump, or the woman who can beat Trump," Springsteen said.

"The Democrats," he added, "don't have an obvious, effective presidential candidate."

But in response to Springsteen's remarks, U.S. labor leader and political organizer RoseAnn DeMoro—who spent the weekend at The Sanders Institute Gathering in Burlington, Vermont telling anyone asking or listening that the Independent senator is the only choice for the next presidential election—on Monday tweeted her agreement that the Democrats do not have anyone at the moment better than Sanders—officially an Independent—to lead the party in the effort to dethrone Trump.

"I agree with this," she said about Springsteen's critique of the potential Democratic field. "And that is why @springsteen needs to help #Bernie2020."

Interviewed by the Washington Post's David Weigel over the weekend, and asked about other possible 2020 candidates, DeMoro was described as "incredulous" about the very premise of the question. "There are no other candidates," she told him.

"If Bernie doesn't run, we don't have anyone who represents what Bernie represents. There is no one in the political spectrum who represents the values that he has," she explained. "There are some who fake it, who feign it—they say, 'Oh, I'm for Medicare for All'—but when push comes to shove they can't articulate anything about Medicare for All. I'm mean, it's a joke."

And it is the integrity of Sanders, she says, that cannot be bought, manufactured, or faked. "When you actually, fundamentally believe something," she said, "people see that. They know when you're authentic."

"When you actually, fundamentally believe something—people see that. They know when you're authentic."

She is certainly not alone in making electrified demands that Sanders run. At the conclusion of a panel event at The Gathering in Burlington on Friday night, many were taken when Yanis Varoufakis, the former finance minister of Greece, made the international argument as he declared: "Let me convey a message from all of us in Europe, for all those comrades of yours that are now struggling to reclaim our cities, our world, our environment: We need Bernie Sanders to run for president!"

Though an intrinsically friendly crowd, there was an eruption of applause and a familiar 2016 chant soon filled the hall: "Bernie! Bernie! Bernie!"

Sanders did not take the bait, however. He demured and stated, "And on that note..." as the chant subsided and event concluded.

Speaking with the Associated Press, Jane O'Meara Sanders, who founded The Sanders Institute as a way to continue to press for the ideas that both she and Bernie believe in, said the family's final decision will be made by looking outward, not necessarily inward.

"It's not about us," O'Meara Sanders said. "It's about what's right for the country." The biggest question, she added, was this one: "Who can beat Donald Trump?"

For DeMoro, it's ultimately less about the failures or shortcomings of others—though those shortcomings do matter—but the singular quality of Sanders that would make him the most potent contender.

"We need a leader that is going to unify the world," she said. "We need someone who gives their life and heart and soul to making us secure on our planet, in our workplace, in our homes, in our lives, after we retire, when our children are born—and that's Bernie Sanders. And there is no one who comes near him on the political scene."

But whether he wants to or not—and there is plenty of evidence to suggest he will run—DeMoro's argument is that, in many ways, there is no choice for the longtime Independent to once again join the Democratic Party, as he did in 2016, in order to lead the nation (and the world) in the existential fight to defeat Donald Trump and the Republican Party he now controls.

"I always say that heroes are not made, they're cornered," DeMoro said. "And I've never seen anybody more cornered in my life than Bernie Sanders."

Listen to The Katie Halper Show's coverage of the weekend Gathering here. Listen the full bonus "on the rocks" interview with RoseAnn DeMoro here.

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A belated, heartfelt happy birthday to Harvey Milk, assassinated in 1978 for daring to come out of the closet, be himself and insist on his rights, who would have turned 89 this week. On Harvey Milk Day, California passed a resolution honoring his "critical role in creating the modern LGBT movement." From one ally: "He imagined a righteous world inside his head and then he set about to create it." These dark days, his message resonates more than ever: "You stand up and fight."

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